Browsing Department of Law by Title
Now showing items 833-852 of 862
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Water, Investment and Sustainability
(2017-07-01) -
We Are Making a New World
(Routledge, 2021)This Handbook brings together 40 of the world's leading scholars and rising stars who study international law from disciplines in the humanities - from history to literature, philosophy to the visual arts - to showcase ... -
A weak defence of an indefensible caste law
(2016-03-01) -
Weaponising Citizenship in China: Domestic Exclusion and Transnational Expansion
This paper offers a critical and historical analysis of the transformation of citizenship in China in a way that challenges both legal orientalism and the overall discourse on Chinese ‘characteristics’ and ‘exceptionalism’. ... -
Wench Tactics? Openings in Conditions of Closure
(2017-04) -
Western foundations of the caste system
(Palgrave, 2017-04-24) -
The Western Sahara Question and International Law: Recognition Doctrine and Self-Determination
(Routledge, 2024-01-11) -
Whaling
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What Is Transnational Law?
(2012) -
What it means to suffer harm
(2022-01-01)In recent years, there has been a growing jurisprudential and philosophical literature on the concept of harm, in particular, what it means to suffer harm. This paper defends the most unpopular account of what it means to ... -
"Where be his quiddities now?": Law and Language in Hamlet
(Oxford University Press, 2013)Abuses of monarchy, nobility, church or wealth are certainly central to Shakespeare. However, depictions of law and its abuses do not casually blend into other critical images of power or authority in the corpus. In Hamlet, ... -
Who is the Subject of (Non) Human Rights?
(Edward Elgar Publishing (EEP), 23-04-2024)This chapter interrogates the concept of the subject of rights and questions whether Jacques Rancière’s work could be used to understand and mobilize the subjectification of non-humans in the context of a ‘pluralization ...